Innovate our way out of recession

by Glen Hiemstra on 26/02/09 at 9:53 pm |   

This is a google alert for an amazing piece in Business Week, based on interviews with me, Glen Hiemstra, and a few other innovators and thinkers, by a terrific writer, Damian Joseph.

Damian offers an overview of the need for and power of innovation, followed by a list of 20 innovations for the next 10 years.

I will say more this weekend about this material when I am off the road, but for now, here is the google alert that I received.

Google News Alert for: glen hiemstra

Innovations of the Future
BusinessWeek – USA
Glen Hiemstra, author and founder of Futurist.com, wants to see universal coverage, while allowing folks to purchase insurance privately. …

Innovation from Recession (this is the set of 20 innovations, with a nice piece on each one).
BusinessWeek – USA
So BusinessWeek asked several futurists, including Futurist.com’s Glen Hiemstra, consultant David Zach, and author Howard Rheingold, to describe what they’d …

Glen Hiemstra is a futurist speaker, consultant, blogger, internet video host and founder of Futurist.com. To arrange for a speech contact Futurist.com.

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5 Responses to “Innovate our way out of recession”

  1. [...] out Glen’s blog for some of his current writings on the subject of Innovating Our Way Out of Recession, which link to interviews with Glen that appeared recently in Business [...]

  2. [...] just did a radio interview with KMJO in Fargo, North Dakota, about the Business Week feature on 20 innovations for the future. They were especially interested in the innovations around cancer and nanotech-based [...]

  3. Jacee

    Aug 15th, 2009

    i am hoping that the global economy would recover from this economic recession. life has been very hard with these massive job cuts.

  4. [...] care reform in the United States. Early in the year, responding to Time Magazine, I suggested that health care reform was a fundamental innovation to help move us beyond the recession. I have little doubt that is [...]

  5. [...] health insurance costs were a key reason that General Motors faltered. This was my argument when I suggested to Business Week early this year that relieving business of the private insurance industry costs would be an innovation that would [...]

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